In some of the articles we have posted this year, some of the Top 10 on the list in this article have been discussed. What would you add - or take away - if you formed your own version of a list like this? Marlene
Jason Hiner Gartner Symposium 2008
http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/hiner/?p=865
October 14th, 2008
On Tuesday,
Gartner analysts Carl Claunch and Dave Cearley gave a crowd of IT leaders at
the Gartner Symposium IT Expo 2008 a list of the top 10 technologies that will
provide important strategic advantages to IT over the next three years. They
encouraged the leaders to keep these technologies in mind as they formulate
budgets and long-term plans.
Claunch and
Cearley delivered their list in the presentation “Top 10 Strategic Technology
Areas for 2009″ at the Orlando
“A strategic
technology is one with the potential for significant impact on the enterprise
in the next three years. Factors that denote significant impact include a high
potential for disruption to IT or the business, the need for a major dollar
investment, or the risk of being late to adopt. Companies should factor these
technologies into their strategic planning process by asking key questions and
making deliberate decisions about them during the next two years. Sometimes the
decision will be to do nothing with a particular technology. In other cases it
will be to continue investing in the technology at the current rate. In still
other cases the decision may be to test/pilot or more aggressively adopt/deploy
the technology.”
Here’s the list:
Now, let’s take a
closer look at each of these areas, and I’ll add my take on each one.
1. Virtualization
They say: Server virtualization is
already in process. Today, the two biggest opportunities in virtualization are
in storage and desktops. Storage virtualization offers simplified access by
pooling systems and can save big money with storage deduplication. Desktop
virtualization allows users to have a portable personality across multiple
systems, delivering a thick client experience with a thin client delivery model.
I say: The biggest factor that
could drive desktop virtualization will be the advent of cheep $100-$200 thin
clients (nettops) based on Intel Atom processors. In terms of storage
virtualization, dedeplication — if effective — could be a huge money saver
because every enterprise has tons of duplicate versions of files clogging up
their file servers.
2. Cloud
Computing
They say: You need to be very
careful about all of the hype, but you need to take it very seriously as well.
They think 80% of Fortune 1000 companies will be using some form of cloud
computing services by 2012. They encouraged IT leaders to consider the back-end
infrastructure and policies of cloud providers and to carefully the development
models.
I say: Claunch and Cearley
briefing mentioned the one reason why a lot of IT leaders will eventually adopt
cloud computing: It can allow IT to move a significant chunk of money
from capital expenditures to operating expenditures. That’s the story.
3. Servers:
Beyond Blades
They say: Blade servers introduced
a shared a computing fabric that allowed some recombination of components and
some efficiencies. The fabric-based server of the future will treat memory,
processors and I/O cards as components in a pool, combining and recombining
them into particular arrangements to suit the needs of the server load.
I say: This sounds terrific in
principle because it’s about greater utilization of resources. But, how will
this relate to virtualization, where the software layer is being abstracted in
much the same way? Can the two work together to provide even more dynamic
server resources? I also wonder about licensing, especially since this involves
CPUs, which a lot of licensing is being tied to.
4. Web-Oriented
Architectures
They say: Expect Internet, Web and
cloud-based concepts (such as SOA) to increasingly drive mainstream
architectures and development models.
I say: We’ve been hearing this
for almost a decade now. I hope that the model is finally changing — it’s
overdue — but as my ZDNet colleague Larry Dignan likes to say, “Hope is not a strategy.”
5. Enterprise Mashups
They say: Mashups mix content from
multiple sources by using feeds from public application programming interfaces
(APIs). Enterprises are now investigating taking mashups from cool Web hobby to
enterprise-class systems to augment their models for delivering and managing
applications.
I say: The best part about
mashups is that they eliminate duplication of effort by allowing developers to
componetize their code and then re-use it themselves and offer others the
ability to use it as well. There needs to be better tools for doing this and
then developers need to get in the habit of thinking about what they can turn
into mashable components during the development process.
6. Specialized
Systems
They say: Specialized server
appliances can save IT time because they are largely preconfigured, but they
also are not as flexible and can’t be reused as easily. A new category called
heterogenous systems is emerging that offers mix-and-match hardware.
Heterogeneous systems are prebuilt and supported by vendors, rather than
custom-built by IT departments.
I say: IT should allow experts
to preconfigure systems as much as possible and whenever it makes sense. If
heterogenous systems can further commoditize servers then it’s a good thing
because it will drive down costs and increase selection. Even better are
virtualized appliances, which provide nearly all the benefits of appliances
without the hardware drawbacks.
7. Social
Software and Social Networking
They say: Your organization is an
entity in the broad Social Web. Get to know Facebook, Twitter, FriendFeed,
LinkedIn and other social sites and applications. Listen to the language of
social media, before starting to speak.
I say: Beyond just looking to
send out marketing messages via social networks, companies need to look at the
ways social networking can allow them to better listen to customers and to
empower employees to become better connected in their industry and specialty.
But beware, social networking can become a time-sink and a productivity killer
when not used in a disciplined way.
8. Unified
Communications
They say: Enterprises are realizing
that they have multiple products and vendors performing the same communications
functions, and that this redundancy creates additional expense, makes it more
difficult for users to learn, and increases the complexity of integration. In
the next three years the number of communications
I say: What is the future of the
good old business desk phone? Some companies such as Cisco see the desk phone
becoming a video and data device. Others see the desk phone going away and
mobile phones (with both a business number and a personal number) becoming the
sole voice device for most business users.
9. Business
Intelligence
They say: Business intelligence
(BI) is one of the most powerful things you can deliver to business decision
makers. Even though we’ve all been doing it for years, we’re not doing it
very well because too much of the data is stuck in silos. Companies need to get
serious and systematic about implementing BI and performance management
solutions because they fuel smarter decisions and better results.
I say: Companies now have lots
of ways to collect data. The problem is that there aren’t as many good ways to
dig into that data and quickly and easily turn it into actionable reports,
graphs, and dashboards. That’s what business intelligence should be about —
making the data easily accessible to the employees who need that data to make
better decisions.
10. Green IT
They say: Consider potential
regulations and have alternative plans for data center and capacity growth.
Many are looking at energy efficiency or ‘green’ products simply for the
practical advantages in energy savings. Some companies are emphasizing green
activities as part of their social responsibility. A socially conscious CEO may
have funds to support some IT changes that result in a greener company.
I say: Green IT is here to stay,
even in a difficult economic environment. Energy will be one of the pre-eminent
public concerns of the next decade and energy conservation will be an important
part of the discussion. IT departments need to act now to start measuring the
energy consumption of IT infrastructure and looking for strategic opportunities
to reduce it, before they are forced to act due to government intervention.
Run, Grow,
Transform
Cearley encouraged the attendees to ask, “How will these technologies effect the way that you run the business, grow the business, and transform the business?” With that in mind, the two analysts closed with a sample action plan based on those three principles (see below).

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